Eden ChristianĢƵ depth keys 51-40 win over Lady Gators
HERMINIE – Geibel Catholic had the will to win but Eden Christian had the depth and the latter won out Monday night.
Emmie Smith scored 15 points and Ella D’Ippolito added 12 as the Lady Warriors gradually wore down the Lady Gators in claiming a 51-40 victory in a WPIAL Class A first round girls basketball playoff game at Yough High School.
Emma Larkin, the WPIALĢƵ second-leading scorer, poured in a game-high 27 points for Geibel, which ended its season at 16-7.
“That just comes down to depth and fresh legs,” Lady Gators coach Sara Larkin said. “It makes it tough when you’re pretty much playing with five versus eight or nine deep for them. ThatĢƵ what got us in the fourth quarter. We were there through three and it just got away from us.”
Larkin scored the gameĢƵ first five points, including the first of her three 3-pointers on the night, before Eden Christian answered with six straight. Ava HendersonĢƵ 3-pointer put the Lady Gators back in front, 8-6. Allie EmswilerĢƵ jump shot for the Lady Warriors was matched by Ava Partridge to give Geibel a 10-8 lead after one quarter.
Eden Christian began crashing the offensive boards and outscored the Lady Gators 9-4 in the second quarter to take a 17-14 halftime lead. The Lady Warriors went in front to stay when D’IppolitoĢƵ two free throws broke a 13-13 tie with 4:05 left in the half.
“The balls were hitting our hands and we weren’t getting control of it,” Sara Larkin said. “I don’t know if thatĢƵ nerves or anxiousness or what but the ball can’t hit your hands and then have them come in and get a rebound. There were a couple possessions where they were getting six, seven shots at a time. You can’t win like that.”
Eden Christian opened the third quarter with an 8-3 run to go up 25-17. Larkin scored four straight points to whittle the gap down to 25-21 with 4:09 left in the frame but Geibel would get no closer the rest of the way.
The Lady Warriors got eight points from D’Ippolito and nine from Smith in the third quarter to build a 37-29 advantage and led by as much as 14 in the fourth.
Emswiler wound up with nine points and Alex Nacey chipped in with eight for Eden Christian in a balanced attack.
GeibelĢƵ only other scorers besides Larkin were Partridge with seven points and Henderson with six.
Larkin, who accounted for all 15 of the Lady Gators’ points in the third quarter, was an uncharacteristic 10 of 21 from the foul line including just three of 10 in the first half.
“SheĢƵ never shot that bad from the free throw line,” said Sara Larkin of her sophomore daughter. “It wasn’t like they were bad shots. I don’t think it was nerves. Maybe it was a little too much adrenaline early in the game.
“She doesn’t give up and none of them do. They all fought to the very end. Sometimes you’re out-skilled or outmatched. The better team won tonight but not for a lack of effort on our part.”
Geibel (16-7) came into the game as the No. 7 seed with Eden Christian 10th, but Larkin disagreed with those seedings. The Lady Warriors (9-13) entered the game on a seven-game losing streak but that stretch included two defeats to top-seeded Union and one each to No. 2 Aquinas Academy, No. 3 St. Joseph and Class AAA No. 3 Beaver Falls.
“ThatĢƵ not a No. 10 seed, letĢƵ be honest here, I don’t care what their record is,” Sara Larkin said. “They may be because thatĢƵ where the WPIAL placed them but thatĢƵ not a No. 10 seed.
“We knew coming in this was going to be competitive and they probably had the edge on us and we were going to have to fight to get that victory.”
The Lady Gators, whose’ lone senior is Victoria Brown, will return all five of their starters next season.
“I’m proud of these kids,” Sara Larkin said. “Every year that I’ve been here – this is my third season – they have improved. The first year we got two wins and we had to really focus on fundamentals and trying to build a foundation. Then the second year, 11 wins and we made it to the playoffs. This year, second in the section.
“They’re gritty, they want it, they all fight, they’re all working together. The chemistry is there. We’ll get there. We’ve got a young team. I feel we’ll continue to just chip away at it, make progress and come back next year even stronger.”




